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Monday, September 18, 2006

The great joy of working in a purely digital medium is that once you've created a good source file, it can be manipulated, at will, into countless new and exciting images.

Every element is changeable: image size, colors, textures, shapes, etc. The original source file for the three images, above, is a simple, square, 3-color (blue, grey and black) .GIF image. I've created dozens of manips from that file -- none of them being simple and only some of them being square.

Ah, the creative thrill of having my fingers on all the digital buttons! I sometimes feel like Dr. Frankenstein on a good day in the lab:

Digital art, still an exciting, new concept to some, is all about bringing creative ideas and imaginings to life, using a computer and printer instead of brushes and paints.

It’s as simple, and wonderful, as that.

I am . . .

a digital artist and photographer, creating with camera, PC, and printer instead of canvas, paint and brush. I’m intrigued by the unexpected and am always in hot pursuit of the Elusive “Wow!” Factor.

Thanks, in part, to the boundless marketing potential of the Internet, my art can be found in private collections, worldwide, and has been featured in “Frontiers in Neuroscience”, a quarterly scientific publication distributed to thousands of libraries, universities, top scientists and medical professionals, worldwide.